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Charlotte Ratings Updated 02/25/26

 
Looks like Hits may be finding a footing.

Could the Mix listeners in the 100.9/99.3 coverage area slowly be coming around? Still below Praise though.
 
Looks like the move to 107.9 has been beneficial for WBT, but detrimental for Mix. Although there is a slight improvement for Mix. And 105.3 is winning the adult urban battle over 101.9. And with CHR, 95.1 is still leading over 96.1, although perhaps Hits may be stabilizing. Perhaps the return of Fred may generate future improvements.
 
I expected WBT to increase a little more on 107.9. They’re tied with WFNZ share wise, and WFNZ is on a much smaller signal.

WKKT had a nice increase and is ahead of WSOC. Highest share in over a year.

WHQC is basically flat. Expected a bigger increase with new morning show.

WBAV continues to decline. They’ve been off musically recently.

WPEG had a good month. Nice increase.
 
Looks like the move to 107.9 has been beneficial for WBT, but detrimental for Mix. Although there is a slight improvement for Mix. And 105.3 is winning the adult urban battle over 101.9. And with CHR, 95.1 is still leading over 96.1, although perhaps Hits may be stabilizing. Perhaps the return of Fred may generate future improvements.
Help me understand how this is beneficial for WBT Lets examine the 6+ numbers from November which is roughly before the Christmas wobble 1110 had a 3.3 and 107.9 a 3.8 . January has WBT-FM 4.2 and Mix with a 1.1. So to go from 3.3 to 4.2 they sunk Mix?

Look at WFAE which went from November's 5.0 to January's 6.3 for #3 WBT-FM is #11 and Mix #19.

Before anyone says it yes these are 6+ numbers which is all I have.
 
So it appears young people who listen to rap or rock are just not listening to the radio.
Be sure to check out the breakout numbers above they tell a different story. The kids are definitely listening.

Advice to WBT, pull the TV ads. They’re not working. Get out in the community and start promoting your station where you want to be heard. The personal touch is usually the best. Make sure your station is visible.
 
News talk is heavily 55+ (and as I like to add, probably even heavily 65+). I wouldn’t expect them to show in the top 25-54 numbers.
Okay given that... Why make a change like this to a format that delivers a 55+ audience that’s conservative, set in their buying habits and which agency buyers we’ve been told are not looking for, rather than working on the Hot A/C format that was in place on 107.9?
 
Okay given that... Why make a change like this to a format that delivers a 55+ audience that’s conservative, set in their buying habits and which agency buyers we’ve been told are not looking for, rather than working on the Hot A/C format that was in place on 107.9?
The News Talk audience is more engaged than with a music format, and WBT does very well with higher income listeners. Plus there’s more inventory on N/T.

I agree that they should have put WBT on 100.9 if they wanted a larger FM. I’m sure they lost a lot of money downgrading Mix, and now they have an AM station that they’re doing nothing with.

I personally wish they would flip Mix to another music format. It sounds horrible and always has. They’ve never had any ratings success outside of Bob & Sheri and Matt & Ramona.
 
Nothing. They were fooling themselves if they thought moving to a different FM and dumping AM was going to help. If you were already listening, you knew where to go. You're not adding any new listeners.
I disagree. I do think you're right in the short term. But those that were already listening had to start listening sometime. They weren't always conservative news-talk listeners; they migrated there as their tastes changed. Sometimes that's with age, but certainly not always. Any potential future listeners have to first sample the product, and the only way that can happen now is for the station to be on FM. Maybe they come for traffic or weather, but as their tastes change they find themselves tuning in for the format. Please don't take this to mean that every 18-24 listener will eventually turn 65 and automatically tune to news-talk. Everybody is different. But a format that attracts the older members of a population has to get those listeners from somewhere. For those potential new listeners, today, they are too young to even find an AM station. To them, AM is their grandparent's radio.
Sure, you're right that switching to FM isn't going to be a magic pill that doubles the audience. But without the switch the format's audience will eventually die.
 
I disagree. I do think you're right in the short term. But those that were already listening had to start listening sometime. They weren't always conservative news-talk listeners; they migrated there as their tastes changed. Sometimes that's with age, but certainly not always. Any potential future listeners have to first sample the product, and the only way that can happen now is for the station to be on FM. Maybe they come for traffic or weather, but as their tastes change they find themselves tuning in for the format. Please don't take this to mean that every 18-24 listener will eventually turn 65 and automatically tune to news-talk. Everybody is different. But a format that attracts the older members of a population has to get those listeners from somewhere. For those potential new listeners, today, they are too young to even find an AM station. To them, AM is their grandparent's radio.
Sure, you're right that switching to FM isn't going to be a magic pill that doubles the audience. But without the switch the format's audience will eventually die.
Now, I do agree with some of what you're saying here. Yes, younger listeners won't even look for an AM. But also, this isn't the first FM signal BT has had. They just moved to another.
 
this isn't the first FM signal BT has had. They just moved to another.
you're right but 99.3 is a class C3 with an erp of 7,700 watts in Chester, SC. it doesn't have much of a signal in mecklenburg county. it really was never a substitute for a strong signal inside the Charlotte metro. It was only there to put a signal in Gastonia after sunset when 1110 is directional (it also puts a signal into york and rock hill, but 1110 does too, day and night. Also, W256BP (99.1) in Charlotte limits reception inside 485. so for most of the potential listeners WBT was only available on AM.
i would have thought Radio One would have put WBT on 100.9, leaving 107.9 - their biggest footprint station - to do something else. i doubt it would have stayed as Mix 107.9, probably a different urban format.
 


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